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Sun, 16 Apr 2006 20:19:50 +0000
"Design" is a very strong word. From time to time when writing Lisp (rare enough in itself, I know) I factor out stuff that seems like the nucleus of a good idea and potentially even reusable code - sexql is one example you might have come across, and dbs is another that you (I hope) won't - because it doesn't exist anywhere other than my laptop and in a few backup locations. (Unless you're the swine that stole my last laptop, anyway)
I'm never quite sure what to do about release-engineering for this kind of stuff. It's not finished enough that I feel good about reserving part of the global CL namespace to refer to it (especially on days when I'm not feeling imaginative and so give it a really generic name), but it's often still potentially useful to other people and just sitting on it - or posting it to an unindexed "transient" forum like small-cl-src - seems also suboptimal.
With that in mind, here's an announcement of the first available version of Text-Template: a poor rip-off of Mark Jason Dominus' Text::Template Perl module, for Lisp.
Example
- <(side-effect) (* 2 3)>#
and some more text #
# here we do TEXT-TEMPLATE> (with-open-file (i "test-template") (make-instance 'text-template :stream i)) #
TEXT-TEMPLATE> (fill-in standard-output*) here is some text 6 and some more text T here NIL
For more information, see http://www.cliki.net/text-template